Embodiments of the present invention relate to an apparatus for supplying power to electronic devices, comprising a housing, an electric power source connector coupled to the housing, an electronic circuit enclosed in the housing and electrically coupled to the power source connector, and a universal serial bus connector coupled to the housing and electrically coupled to the electronic circuit, wherein the connector is capable of supplying electrical power to one or more electronic devices for battery charging. The electronic circuit is capable of controlling the charging of the batteries of more than one device and can be enabled to provide data communication between data devices. The apparatus may receive power from a utility power outlet or from another electronic device through the USB connector.
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1. An electronic charging apparatus, comprising:
a housing; an electric power source connector coupled to said housing; an electronic circuit enclosed in said housing and coupled to said electric power source connector; and a plurality of universal serial bus connectors coupled to said housing, wherein said connectors are operable to supply electrical power to electronic devices and wherein said electronic circuit is enabled to control recharging of batteries of said electronic devices.
8. A method for charging battery-powered devices, comprising:
providing electrical power to an electronic charging apparatus comprising a plurality of universal serial bus connectors; coupling said battery-powered devices electronically to respective universal serial bus connectors of said electronic charging apparatus; supplying electrical power for charging said battery-powered devices from an electrical power source via said universal serial bus connectors; and controlling said electrical power for charging to an appropriate power level by means of circuitry resident in said electronic charging apparatus.
14. A system for charging a rechargeable battery-powered portable electronic device, comprising:
an electrical power source; an electronic charging apparatus for electrically coupling with said electrical power source and comprising a plurality of universal serial bus connectors, said electronic charging apparatus for supplying battery charging power; a cable electrically coupled with said electronic charging apparatus and for accepting power from one of said plurality of universal serial bus connectors; and, a rechargeable battery-powered portable electronic device electrically coupled with said cable, wherein said battery-powered portable electronic device is enabled to accept said battery charging power from said electronic charging apparatus by said universal serial bus connector.
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The present invention relates to the field of recharging battery-powered electronic devices.
As the number of small, portable, electronic devices in daily use have multiplied, so too have the devices used to charge the batteries of these devices. Each new device seems to arrive from the store with a recharging unit, or "brick," in the sales package.
Many modern portable electronic devices are capable of processing data. There are even complete personal area networks comprised entirely of devices that are solely powered by internal batteries.
Such useful devices are commonly found in use by those travelling in the employment of technology concerns. Engineers in high tech often find themselves working in a hotel room with an array of devices, such as a laptop computer, a printer, a scanner and sometimes a cellular phone, all linked together into a personal area network and connected to the internet. Frequently, the same devices that can be linked together by data cables need to link to utility power through their respective recharging units. The result of this need is the requirement that the travelling "road warrior" carries an ever enlarging array of recharging units and cables.
Most modern computers are capable of communicating with peripheral devices by use of the Universal Serial Bus (USB) standard. The USB offers both high speed serial data communication between a wide variety of peripheral and communicating devices as well as a power connection for some devices. Since some portable devices, such as personal data assistants, can accept power through the same USB port through which they communicate to a host computer, a number of devices have begun to emerge with recharging units that recharge through a USB-type port and the devices data cable. However, these devices require a specific recharging unit for each unit being recharged and, when using this system, cannot simultaneously be in communication via the same cable.
Prior art
What is required is an apparatus or system that can reduce the need for multiple charging systems in a suite of portable electronic devices. Such an apparatus should be able to charge a wide variety and large number of electronic devices and should use existing mechanical and electrical hardware to a large extent.
Disclosed herein is a device power and recharge apparatus that uses the power output capability of the universal serial bus port to provide device power to a large number and variety of electronic devices. The power and recharge apparatus can simultaneously allow for data communication through the same port and perform as a hub for a personal area network when connected to the appropriate devices. The power and recharge apparatus can take power from computer ports as well as from utility power sources.
Embodiments of the present invention relate to using a dedicated charging USB hub-device to charge a portable electronic device using a standard electrical and mechanical interface. This plug-in transformer/hub may be used in conjunction with any notebook or desktop computer and various other USB devices. The travelling user can equip himself with several USB charging cables for his small rechargeable gadgets, which can recharge his cellular phone, or other similar products available for handheld devices. When travelling light, the user need only carry his USB charger cables and his notebook computer. The notebook computer can recharge any or all of his other devices. If a personal area network hub is needed, the user can also use the plug-in transformer/hub. The hub need not be plugged in since the notebook can provide power to each device. If the user happens to be located near a utility power outlet, then the transformer/hub can be plugged into the wall, and the USB recharger cables connected to the devices which need to be recharged. The notebook computer need not be connected, since the USB cables and the transformer/hub can be used solely to recharge the devices.
More specifically, embodiments of the present invention relate to an apparatus for supplying power to electronic devices, comprising a housing, an electric power source connector coupled to the housing, an electronic circuit enclosed in the housing and electrically coupled to the power source connector, and a universal serial bus connector coupled to the housing and electrically coupled to the electronic circuit, wherein the connector is capable of supplying electrical power to one or more electronic devices for battery charging. The electronic circuit is capable of controlling the charging of the batteries of more than one device and can be enabled to provide data communication between data devices. The apparatus may receive power from a utility power outlet or from another electronic device through one of the USB connectors.
These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after having read the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments which are illustrated in the various drawing figures.
The operation and components of this invention can be best visualized by reference to the drawings.
Reference will now be made in detail to the preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. While the invention will be described in conjunction with the preferred embodiments, it will be understood that they are not intended to limit the invention to these embodiments. On the contrary, the invention is intended to cover alternatives, modifications and equivalents, which may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Furthermore, in the following detailed description of the present invention, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it will be obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known methods, procedures, components, and circuits have not been described in detail so as not to unnecessarily obscure aspects of the present invention.
An exemplary handheld portable computing device, 105, is illustrated in FIG. 2. Sometimes known as a personal data assistant (PDA) it is presented here as an example of the type of device that can be powered by rechargeable batteries and also require data communication. Typical handheld portable computing device 105 has a power switch 202, an alphanumeric input element 203, a display element 204, a battery compartment 205 and some form of stylus, 206, or other means for interfacing with alphanumeric input element 203. A typical handheld portable computing device can also include a device for wirelessly communicating data, with networks or other computing devices, such as infrared transmitter/receiver 207 and RF transmitting antenna 208. A handheld portable computing device also typically has a connector, 209, that allows it to communicate data via a cable to a host computer.
The wired communication that is often found between a typical handheld portable computing device, such as a personal data assistant, and a host computer is often enabled by a cradle device such as is shown in FIG. 3. There, cradle 301 holds the handheld portable computing device, which is not shown, while it communicates with a host computer via connector 302 and serial data cable 303. Communication with the host computer can also be performed wirelessly.
The embodiments of the present invention discussed herein relate to a method and a system for recharging rechargeable electronic devices. The electronic devices can be any rechargeable electrical or electronic device that uses a rechargeable battery and can be recharged using power at voltages commonly available or derived from Universal Serial Bus (USB) connectors.
A universal serial bus connector pin-out is illustrated in FIG. 4. Male connector 403, as do all universal serial bus connectors, comprises four conducting pins. Pin 1, at 411, supplies Vcc power, typically +5 volts DC. Pin 2, at 412, is the negative data connection pin and pin 3, at 413, is the positive data connection pin. Pin 4, at 414, supplies a grounding connector. All the pins are contained within housing 410 which is a grounded shield.
Female connector 404 is also contained within a shielding housing, 420. In the female connector, the pins, 1 at 421, 2 at 422, 3 at 423 and 4 at 424, are arranged to affirmatively contact their counterparts in the male connector.
The universal serial bus has emerged as a very widely used standard connection for computer peripherals and other devices that communicate data.
Note that, in
Note that in this discussion of an embodiment of the present invention, reference is made to apparatus 600 by several terms. It is called variously a charging apparatus, a recharging apparatus, a charging accessory, a transformer, a transformer/hub and other names that all refer to the same device. The variety of names are not used to indicate a difference of embodiment or capability but are used to more correctly indicate the function in the instant discussion of the embodiment.
Circuitry within this implementation of apparatus 600, illustrated in
Also shown in
Recharging apparatus 600 is used to provide data communication in
The embodiment of the present invention discussed in this detailed description enables the user to reduce his or her electronic equipment needs significantly by requiring only one device to recharge a possible multitude of battery powered devices. While users who travel frequently are expected to be benefited most by this embodiment, the non-traveling user can also reduce office clutter be reducing to one the number of power supply units required in the wirelessly enabled workplace. While form factors, numbers of devices serviced and other factors can vary widely between conceivable embodiments, all share the ability to supply battery-recharge-level power to multiple devices and to enable data communication between those devices via the universal serial bus protocol.
It must also be noted here that data communication is not necessary within this embodiment. Multiple non-data-enabled devices, such as the electric shaver 504 discussed above, are capable of receiving power and recharging batteries by use of this embodiment. All that is required is that these devices be enabled to accept electrical power by way of a universal serial bus connector.
The foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the present invention have been presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto and their equivalents.
Wong, Yoon Kean, Lemke, Steven C.
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